Word raced across the German countryside. Nobleman
and commoner, priest and layman crowded forward to drink in details on this
day, July 30, 1233. The man most
hated and feared in all of Germany was dead. But how?

"He was murdered on the highway as he rode
home from Mainz. Gerhard, his Franciscan assistant, was killed, too."

It was hard not to avoid the connection between
Mainz and Marburg. Just five days earlier, the Archbishop of Mainz had called a
synod (local church council). Conrad of Marburg, first inquisitor of Germany,
had accused the Count of Sayn of heresy. The Count strongly denied the charge
and appealed to the Archbishop. The Archbishop agreed to examine the case.

Little wonder the count was worried. Conrad, who
tortured himself as part of his religious system, was even more savage with
"heretics." Anyone who was indicted for heresy in his court had just
two choices: to confess themselves guilty or to deny it. If they confessed,
their hair was shaved off and penalties assessed. If they denied that they were
guilty, they went to the stake. It seems never to have occurred to Conrad that
someone might deny their guilt because they actually were innocent. It should
have, for his indictments were obtained by threatening accused people with
torture unless they gave him names of others who were "guilty" of
heresy.

When the clergy assembled at Mainz, Conrad was
there. The synod found no evidence of heresy in the Count of Sayn. Frustrated,
Conrad called for a crusade against heretical nobles.

It had to be with relief that the targets of
Conrad's wrath learned of his death. As brutal as the thirteenth century was,
even Conrad's contemporaries could not stomach his harsh methods. When the
bishops of Germany took over their nation's inquisition, they applied standards
of inquiry that were more realistic and fair.

It seems not many people mourned Conrad's death.
One who did was Pope Gregory IX. Gregory was an instigator of the inquisition.
He called for harsh penalties on Conrad's murderers and extended his protection
over Conrad's memory.

Conrad had also been confessor to Elizabeth of
Hungary, the gentle queen who opened Europe's first leprosarium. His treatment
of her shows his temperament. He made her send her children away and ordered
her to expel the women who had been her close companions and suffered exile
with her. He surrounded Elizabeth with his own, unsympathetic appointees. He
imposed harsh penances on her. According to some accounts, he even personally
beat her.

Lutheran

Presbyterian

About Me

Retired. Reformed and Presbyterian by background, but dedicated to the Anglican Prayerbook with degrees from Presbyterian and Episcopal seminaries. Informed by both traditions. Not giving up the 1662 BCP for the Presbyterians and not giving up the Westminster Standards for the Anglicans.